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Good Mongolians - Who makes steering wheel covers in a small Czech town?

Apos-Auto, a company based in Blansko, Southeast Czech Republic, has been recruiting workers from Mongolia. They are here, and so are all the dilemmas and problems imposed on Europe since it opened up to foreigners. The locals are now experiencing the reality of life in a multicultural world, while local businesses might be rather too strict when dealing with their foreign employees' uncertain prospects.

Apos introduced the
manufacture of leather-wrapped steering wheels in Blansko five years ago. But
the Czech workforce were far from ready to take up the toilsome and badly-paid
work. Consequently the company appealed for labour from abroad. The town's web
pages say that a total of a hundred and fifty migrant workers came to the town
in 2005, Mongolia being the most frequent country of
origin. By this year, Mongolians have grown into a community of over five
hundred. The leather wrapping they make is used for steering wheels by Audi,
Seat, Toyota, and Ford. Clearly, the Czech company, one of the region's biggest
employers, could hardly do without them.

The local
residents in Blansko, a town of twenty thousand, find it very difficult to get
used to their new neighbours. And the journey from Ulaanbaatar to South Moravia and back is not the most
straightforward one. Thus Blansko is a strange mixture of Mongolian poverty,
Czech laws, with a sense of predatoriness prevailing on both sides.

When
personal interests gain the upper hand

“I simply do
not want them here,” Tomáš Urminetský, manager of Café Berger declares
adamantly. The cellar bistro in the centre of Blansko is a banned venue for the
Mongolians. No, there is no sign on the door announcing the ban. All the owner
needs to do is to put the “Reserved” signs on empty tables. “I'm not going to
hunt them in the streets and beat them up – I am no racist – but I am not going
to be their slave either,” says the restaurant owner, distressed by their
behaviour. He says the Mongolians spend little money, get drunk quickly, and
sometimes become aggressive and haughty. Other guests do not feel comfortable
in their presence, which doesn't help either.

Furthermore, he
is not the only person in Blansko who could do without the exotic
visitors. Although the town is home to another eight hundred foreigners, mostly
from Slovakia, Ukraine or Vietnam, things only started to be
difficult when the Mongolians came. Mayor Jaroslava Králová says it may be
put down to their number and different habits: “They tend to move in big groups
and, unlike the Vietnamese, are often out in the streets.” Most of the
foreigners speak no Czech and can hardly communicate with the local people.
Apos, the company which employs the migrant workers, had made no announcements
about its intention to invite them, so their sudden arrival in Blansko must
have come as a shock to a conservative town where the communist party continued
to win elections until two years ago, well after the fall of communism in the
country as a whole.

General
practitioners have been under pressure from the local people, too. Particularly
in the beginning, people believed they were at risk of contracting unknown
diseases when meeting the foreigners in the waiting rooms.

Whilst the
mayor believes everyone has settled down by now, still the housing issues
remain to be solved. Once in Blansko, the Mongolian workers look for private
apartments in the town and nearby villages. They leave the dormitories run by
Apos or Baldangotov Jargalsaikhan, an interpreter and work agent. The reasons
are lack of privacy and poor sanitary conditions. And this is precisely why the
local tourist centre warns against staying at these places.

When the
Mongolians move to a private place, the neighbours tend to be rather dismayed.
“I hear that groups of up to ten live in a single small flat, and they are
loud,” says the mayor.

Jiří Vojanec, a
flat owner who rents out to one of the Mongolian families, knows that things
are not so bad. A year after the Mongolians moved to his flat, the tenants'
cooperative refused to give a positive report for the purposes of the
immigration police, saying their behaviour in the house was unacceptable. Mr
Vojanec went from neighbour to neighbour, wanting to know what it was that made
the Mongolian family so unwanted. “It turned out to be merely that the head of
the cooperative was envious as he had intended to buy my flat for his son,” he
says. There was only one incident involving his tenants as they were unable to
get into their flat after someone had stuck needles into their lock and they
had to call the locksmith.

Extra shift
– shelter against hatred

Mr Vojanec
works abroad, too, and complains about how the local people treat the Mongolians,
though altruism is not his only consideration. The fact is, he says, that they
are willing to pay fifteen hundred to two thousand crowns more in rent than
Czechs, and – unlike Czechs – never complain.

“The
accommodation capacity is not huge, and the local people realize that the
foreigners have to live somewhere, and so they ask for higher rents,” says
Blanka Bendová from Charita Blansko, a local charity. But when her colleagues
try to find a flat for a Mongolian family, the owners usually withdrew the
offer once they realize they are being asked to rent out to Mongolians.

However, not
everyone in the town treats them with disrespect: Charita runs Czech language
courses; the summer historic fair had a yurt standing in the centre
of Blansko where the local people went to sample traditional Mongolian
dishes. And when the town web forum became a target for public statements with
a racist edge, the officials closed the site.

Similarly, when
neonazis staged a rally in the town last spring to voice protest against the
Mongolians' alleged criminal behaviour, hardly any of the local people joined
the event. The town requested that the police oversee the demonstration. As the
Mongolians feared physical attacks, Apos invited them to work an extra shift in
order to keep away from the streets.

Yet, the
Mongolians in Blansko often face much more serious challenges than the
unfriendliness of the local people. They come here with huge debts. “Most of
them sell everything they have, or pawn their flats, only to be able to come
here,” says Veronika Zikmundová, an expert on Mongolia at Charles University in Prague. The average salary in Ulaanbaatar is 100 dollars a month, but with
unemployment reaching high levels, few people have a permanent job. The fee
they have to pay to the agencies which find them work in the Czech Republic ranges from 1,000 to 1,500 euros.
Baldangotov Jargalsaikhan works as a translator in the Apos factory, has his
own office there, and is responsible for recruiting Mongolian workers. He
admits that the workers pay him for finding them a job. At the same time, he is
paid by Apos, says the company's spokesman, Jiří Šrámek.

Extra
shifts: nothing unusual

The work at the
factory is not easy. “The workers' requalification takes about three months,”
says spokesman Šrámek. During this time, the new employees receive only a
limited salary. They are paid by the task, and a wrapping for one steering
wheel earns them around 65 crowns (EUR 2.50), depending on the type. “The money
I earned was hardly enough to pay for rent,” says a message posted at Orloo.com
by a Mongolian man working in Blansko.

A young
Mongolian man, who now lives in Brno, a city not far from Blansko, and
who wished to remain anonymous, says it also takes over three months to get to
grips with the sewing process. The workers in Apos work with glues as well, and
the Mongolians complain this leads to rashes and headaches.

In order to
earn the monthly salary of 15 to 20 thousand crowns (EUR 600 to 800), promised
by the agencies and mentioned by spokesman Šrámek, the workers have to
work virtually all the time. “They work up to twelve hours a day but we are not
happy about that,” says the company's spokesman. Yet, the factory may benefit
from those who like to work hard as they help save labour costs. “The minimum
monthly output is 120 steering wheels per head. If anyone wants to produce more
than that, they are welcome,” says Jargalsaikhan.

Some of the
migrants look for other types of work. The residence permit – Czech legislation
says – is directly related to the work permit which automatically expires if
the person leaves the job. Their only chance of staying on legally is to
quickly find a new job, otherwise the person risks being deported. “The
Mongolians usually pay the agencies for finding them a new job but still end up
without the legal status,” says Tomáš Janeba from the International
Organization for Migration. Illegal workers are fully at the mercy of both the
agencies and the employers.

The Mongolians
are under pressure not to leave. “If the workers leave before their contract
expires, they are fined by the employer,” says Jargalsaikhan who often finds
himself paying the fines instead of the workers who actually breach the
contracts. Ms Zikmundová says the Mongolians in Blansko are anxious: “The
agencies normally warn them that if they should try to find another job, their
visas will be cancelled immediately.” The same would happen if they tried to
complain about the conditions. Moreover, two years ago the town authorities
agreed with the factory, the foreign police and the state police, and the
employment office that permits will also be cancelled in cases of unacceptable
behaviour. “Those who will not respect our laws and principles of community
life will be made to leave. Even if they are good employees,” says Jiří
Pernica, one of the owners of Apos and former communist mayor of Brno. However, it is impossible to find
out exactly how many people have so far been sacked from Blansko, says Roman
Pitr, spokesman for the Foreign Police in the Brno region.

The article has been
prepared under the Multicultural Centre Prague's project called Czech Made? which
is supported by the European Commission. A comics was created on the basis of
the text which will be shown in spring 2009 at a CZECH MADE? exhibition in Prague, Brno, Ostrava and in the European Parliament in Strasbourg.

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Martina KřížkováMartina Křížková graduated from the Faculty of Social Sciences at the Charles University in Prague in the subject field of media studies. She coordinated a campaign in support of equal rights at the Multicultural Center Prague. At present she is working for the Czech Television.